US11002913B2 - Optical dispersion compensator on silicon - Google Patents
Optical dispersion compensator on silicon Download PDFInfo
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- US11002913B2 US11002913B2 US16/835,093 US202016835093A US11002913B2 US 11002913 B2 US11002913 B2 US 11002913B2 US 202016835093 A US202016835093 A US 202016835093A US 11002913 B2 US11002913 B2 US 11002913B2
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- G02B6/29379—Optical coupling means having data bus means, i.e. plural waveguides interconnected and providing an inherently bidirectional system by mixing and splitting signals with wavelength selective means characterised by the function or use of the complete device
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- G02B6/0208—Refractive index modulation gratings, e.g. Bragg gratings characterised by their structure, wavelength response
- G02B6/021—Refractive index modulation gratings, e.g. Bragg gratings characterised by their structure, wavelength response characterised by the core or cladding or coating, e.g. materials, radial refractive index profiles, cladding shape
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- H04B10/25—Arrangements specific to fibre transmission
- H04B10/2507—Arrangements specific to fibre transmission for the reduction or elimination of distortion or dispersion
- H04B10/2513—Arrangements specific to fibre transmission for the reduction or elimination of distortion or dispersion due to chromatic dispersion
- H04B10/25133—Arrangements specific to fibre transmission for the reduction or elimination of distortion or dispersion due to chromatic dispersion including a lumped electrical or optical dispersion compensator
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- G02B6/29379—Optical coupling means having data bus means, i.e. plural waveguides interconnected and providing an inherently bidirectional system by mixing and splitting signals with wavelength selective means characterised by the function or use of the complete device
- G02B6/29395—Optical coupling means having data bus means, i.e. plural waveguides interconnected and providing an inherently bidirectional system by mixing and splitting signals with wavelength selective means characterised by the function or use of the complete device configurable, e.g. tunable or reconfigurable
Definitions
- the present invention relates to optical communication techniques. More particularly, the present invention provides an optical dispersion compensator integrated in a silicon photonics system.
- Optical interconnects may provide a way forward, and silicon photonics may prove particularly useful, once integrated on the standard silicon chips.
- 40-Gbit/s and then 100-Gbit/s data rates WDM optical transmission over existing single-mode fiber is a target for the next generation of fiber-optic communication networks.
- the big hangup so far has been the fiber impairments like chromatic dispersion that are slowing the communication signal down.
- Chromatic dispersion is a result of the dependence of the refractive index on the wavelength. Different frequency components of the light-wave experience different phase delays due to the refractive index change. The phase difference causes distortion on the signal.
- distortion and attenuation of the optical signals take their toll.
- the present invention relates to optical telecommunication techniques. More particularly, the present invention provides an optical dispersion compensator that is based on an optical filter with small dimension and athermal characteristics directly integrated in a silicon photonics chip for high data rate DWDM optical communications, though other applications are possible.
- the present invention provides an optical dispersion compensator integrated with a silicon photonics system.
- the optical dispersion compensator includes a first phase-shifter on a silicon substrate and a second phase-shifter on the silicon substrate. Additionally, the optical dispersion compensator includes a first 2 ⁇ 2 splitter having a first exit port coupled to an input port of the first phase-shifter and a second exit port coupled to an input port of the second phase-shifter and a second 2 ⁇ 2 splitter having a first entry port coupled to an output port of the first phase-shifter and a second entry port coupled to an output port of the second phase-shifter.
- the optical dispersion compensator includes a third phase-shifter on the silicon substrate having an input port coupled to a first exit port of the second 2 ⁇ 2 splitter and an output port coupled to a first entry port of the first 2 ⁇ 2 splitter to form an optical loop with the first phase-shifter and the second phase-shifter.
- the second entry port of the first 2 ⁇ 2 splitter is for coupling with an input fiber and the second exit port of the second 2 ⁇ 2 splitter is for coupling with an output fiber.
- the optical loop is characterized by a total phase delay tunable via each of the first phase-shifter, the second phase-shifter, and the third phase-shifter such that a normal dispersion (>0) at a certain wavelength in the input fiber is substantially compensated and independent of temperature.
- the present invention provides a method for compensating fiber dispersion in a compact device integrated in a system-on-chip.
- the method includes providing a silicon-on-insulator substrate and forming a first waveguide and a second waveguide embedded in a first cladding material on the silicon-on-insulator substrate.
- the first waveguide and the second waveguide are optically coupled to each other in parallel and respectively coupled to a first 2 ⁇ 2 coupler and a second 2 ⁇ 2 coupler.
- the method includes forming a window of the first cladding material.
- the method includes forming third waveguide in the window.
- the third waveguide is surrounded by a second cladding material filled in the window.
- the third waveguide is coupled to a first entry port of the first 2 ⁇ 2 coupler and a first exit port of the second 2 ⁇ 2 coupler to form an optical loop with the first waveguide and the second waveguide.
- the method includes coupling a second entry port of the first 2 ⁇ 2 coupler to an input fiber and a second exit port of the second 2 ⁇ 2 coupler to an output fiber.
- the optical loop is characterized by a total phase delay tunable via each of the first waveguide, the second waveguide, and the third waveguide such that a normal dispersion (>0) at a certain wavelength in the input fiber is substantially compensated and independent of temperature.
- the present invention provides an optical dispersion compensator integrated with a silicon photonics system including multiple optical dispersion compensators cascaded in series with each second entry port of a next stage optical dispersion compensator described herein being coupled to the second exit port of a current stage optical dispersion compensator described herein.
- the present invention provides an optical dispersion compensator integrated with a silicon photonics system.
- the optical dispersion compensator includes multiple first optical dispersion compensators cascaded in series.
- Each first optical dispersion compensator includes a pair of first optical filters coupled in parallel in a main path between a first input port and a first output port and multiple optical filter units cascaded in parallel through one pair of 2 ⁇ 2 couplers for each two adjacent optical filter units in a feedback path from the first output port to the first input port.
- Each of the multiple optical filter units includes a pair of second optical filters coupled in parallel forming a Mach-Zehnder Interferometer.
- Each first input port of a next stage first optical dispersion compensator is coupled to the first output port of a current stage first optical dispersion compensator.
- the pair of first optical filters is constrained under an athermal condition that a temperature variation of a first effective index of refraction multiplied by a first length of a first one of the pair of first optical filters therein cancels a temperature variation of a second effective index of refraction multiplied by a second length of a second one of the pair of first optical filters therein.
- Each Mach-Zehnder Interferometer is constrained under an athermal condition that a temperature variation of a first effective index of refraction multiplied by a first length of a first one of the pair of second optical filters therein cancels a temperature variation of a second effective index of refraction multiplied by a second length of a second one of the pair of second optical filters therein.
- the present invention provides a system-on-chip for a silicon photonics system including a single silicon-on-insulator substrate formed with a dispersion compensator described herein for compensating optical dispersion of a single-mode fiber of a certain length at a certain wavelength of any channel in a broadband for telecommunication.
- FIG. 1 is a plot of index of refraction for silica material versus wavelength.
- FIG. 2 is a plot of group velocity dispersion of a typical single-mode fiber versus wavelength.
- FIG. 3 is a plot or relative delay time due to chromatic dispersion of optical fiber versus a relative change of pulse frequency of the optical signal.
- FIG. 5 is a result of a phase response of an optical dispersion compensator according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 6 is a schematic diagram of the optical dispersion compensator in an athermal configuration according to a specific embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 7 is a schematic diagram of the optical dispersion compensator in an athermal configuration according to another specific embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 8 is flow chart showing a method for compensating fiber dispersion in a compact device integrated in a system-on-chip according to an alternative embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 9 is a schematic diagram of an optical dispersion compensator in an athermal configuration cascaded in whole according to an alternative embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 10 is a schematic diagram of an optical dispersion compensator in an athermal configuration cascaded in part according to an alternative embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 11 is a schematic diagram of an optical dispersion compensator in an athermal configuration cascaded in part according to another alternative embodiment of the present invention.
- Group velocity dispersion is the group delay (inverse of group velocity) dependence of an optical signal on the frequency or wavelength.
- silica material which is a typical material for optical fiber, as shown in FIG. 1
- a shorter wavelength wave has higher effective refractive index and slower group velocity than a longer wavelength wave.
- the GVD is positive for this fiber, i.e., the fiber suffers a so-called normal GVD.
- the GVD of a medium is negative, the dispersion of this medium is an abnormal GVD.
- FIG. 2 shows a plot of optical dispersion (i.e., GVD) of a single-mode fiber at different wavelength.
- a normal GVD of ⁇ 17 ps/nm/km is obtained for the fiber.
- 17 ps delay is results from optical signal pulse after it is transmitted through the optical fiber over 1 km in length, provided that the pulse width of the spectral line of a light source for transmitting the signal is 1 nm.
- the first waveguide 131 comprises a first core material with a first index of refraction n 1 and an elongated shape of the first length L 1 embedded in a first cladding material 141 on the silicon substrate.
- a cross-section view an example of a waveguide is shown with a core material in a typical rectangular shape embedded in a cladding material overlying a substrate.
- the cladding material usually has an index of refraction smaller than that of the core material so that the light can be confined substantially inside the geometry of the core of the waveguide.
- the second waveguide 132 includes a second core material with a second index of refraction n 2 and an elongated shape of the second length L 2 embedded in the first cladding material 141 formed on the same silicon substrate.
- a second phase delay for the optical signal of the certain wavelength passing the second phase-shifter 132 is yielded.
- the second phase delay may be different from the first phase delay.
- the first waveguide and the second waveguide coupled in parallel with a relative phase delay to form a Mach-Zehnder interferometer.
- Overall physical length of the Mach-Zehnder interferometer including both 2 ⁇ 2 splitters 111 and 112 can be made quite compact.
- the length of the dispersion compensator 100 can be just about 100 ⁇ m.
- the third waveguide 133 includes a third core material with a third index of refraction n 3 and an elongated shape of the third length L 3 embedded in a second cladding material 142 .
- the second cladding material 142 does not formed directly on the silicon substrate.
- a window of the first cladding material 141 is created after the first cladding material is formed on the silicon substrate.
- the second cladding material 142 is filled in the window of the first cladding material 141 .
- the third waveguide 133 is embedded within the second cladding material which is still chosen to have a smaller index of refraction than the third index of refraction for confining light inside the core material therein. Accordingly, the third phase delay for the optical signal of the certain wavelength passing the third phase-shifter 133 , which is set into an optical feedback loop, is yielded.
- a total phase delay of the optical dispersion compensator 100 is a manifestation of the first phase delay, the second phase delay, and the third phase delay associated with the structure provided by the Mach-Zehnder interferometer formed by the first waveguide 131 and the second waveguide 132 and the optical feedback loop formed by coupling the third waveguide 133 to the Mach-Zehnder interferometer.
- Each of the first waveguide, the second waveguide, and the third waveguide can be independently fabricated and tuned with material and geometry selections.
- a heating element can be installed to be around each waveguide to tune the index of refraction by changing temperature.
- the dispersion compensator 100 is directly integrated in a silicon chip with compact dimensions.
- FIG. 5 is a result of a phase response of an optical dispersion compensator according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- This diagram is merely an example, which should not unduly limit the scope of the claims.
- the fiber dispersion is assumed to be ⁇ 17 ps/nm/km for a signal of a wavelength of ⁇ 1549.7 nm.
- a dispersion characteristics of a dispersion compensator based on the embodiment of the present disclosure is plotted. As shown in FIG.
- a change of phase delay curve 520 versus wavelength around 1549.7 nm yields a negative slope of ⁇ 2166 ps/nm over a bandwidth of 5 GHz.
- a change of insertion loss of the signal versus wavelength is also plotted, showing the insertion loss is well controlled below 0.5 dB. At the specific wavelength 1549.7 nm, the insertion loss is only 0.25 dB.
- the figure also shows a free-spectrum range (FSR) value of 50 GHz is yielded, giving possibility for the same dispersion compensator to compensate optical signal in different channel wavelengths in a broad band allowed by the FSR.
- FSR free-spectrum range
- the dispersion compensator is designed with a single optimized signal wavelength.
- multiple dispersion compensator are separately employed, though at least certain numbers of different dispersion compensators for different wavelengths can be still fabricated on a single silicon substrate, with feasibility to be integrated in multi-channel DWDM silicon photonics system.
- tuning the first waveguide, the second waveguide, and the third waveguide can done both during their fabrication and afterward.
- the core material and cladding material of each waveguide can be properly selected for achieving different value of the phase delay.
- the core material of each waveguide can be one selected from single crystal silicon, poly-crystal silicon, SiN, Si 3 N 4 , SiON, silicon germanium alloy (Si x Ge 1-x ), or other materials compatible with the silicon-on-insulator substrate.
- the core material for the first waveguide 131 , the second waveguide 132 , and the third waveguide 133 is the same.
- the core material for the first waveguide 131 is different from that for the second waveguide 132 .
- the first cladding material 141 can be one selected from SiO 2 , SiN, Si 3 N 4 , SiON, Air, silicon germanium alloy (Si x Ge 1-x ), and indium tin oxide.
- the core of each waveguide can be formed variably with a length and cross-section shape.
- the core can be formed with a cross-sectional shape in rectangular, a simple channel waveguide.
- the core can be formed in complex shape such as a combination of two rectangular shapes. For example, a rib waveguide having a smaller rectangle on top of a wider rectangle, a slot-channel waveguide having two rectangles in parallel separated by a small gap, a slot-rib waveguide having a slot-channel on top of a wider rectangle, and a multi-channel waveguide having two rectangles stacking together.
- a triangle shape waveguide can be provided.
- different structures can be designed for the first waveguide 131 and the second waveguide 132 in order to realize different effective indice of refraction and to keep the combination of the first waveguide 131 and the second waveguide 132 an athermal phase-shifter.
- the optical dispersion compensator 100 is tunable in temperature for achieving certain value for proper dispersion compensation and is an athermal dispersion compensator that is independent from environmental temperature change.
- FIG. 6 is a schematic diagram of the optical dispersion compensator 100 in an athermal configuration according to a specific embodiment of the present invention.
- each waveguide can be formed to have a heating element attached so that its index of refraction can be tuned by changing the temperature thereof.
- a heating element 1311 is associated with the first waveguide 131 .
- a heating element 1321 is attached with the second waveguide 132 .
- each phase-shifter is a waveguide formed with a core of a certain shape and a length within a cladding, which can be characterized by an effective index of refraction n eff and a length L.
- the effective index of refraction of the phase-shifter depends on the shape the core, the indices of refraction of both the core material and the cladding material, and other properties such as optical-thermal coefficient, mode structure associated with the geometry, wavelength and polarization mode of signals, etc.
- the first phase-shifter 131 is characteristically marked with (n eff1 , L 1 ).
- the second phase-shifter 132 is marked with (n eff2 , L 2 )
- the third phase-shifter 133 is marked with (n eff3 , L 3 ).
- the athermal condition is to ensure that a temperature variation of a first effective index of refraction n eff1 multiplied by a first length L 1 of the first phase-shifter cancels a temperature variation of a second effective index of refraction n eff2 multiplied by a second length L 2 of the second phase-shifter.
- the second cladding material used to surround the third waveguide core needs to be properly selected.
- the core of the third waveguide 133 can be one material selected from single crystal silicon, poly-crystal silicon, SiN, Si 3 N 4 , SiON, and silicon germanium alloy (Si x Ge 1-x ), similar to that for forming the first or second waveguide cores.
- the second cladding material needs to be selected with a thermal optical coefficient in an opposite sign compared to that of the third waveguide core.
- the unit of the first phase-shifter and the second phase-shifter coupled in parallel is configured to be an athermal unit, satisfying the condition that a temperature variation of the first effective index of refraction n eff1 multiplied by the first length L 1 of the first phase-shifter cancels a temperature variation of the second effective index of refraction n eff2 multiplied by the second length L 2 of the second phase-shifter.
- the third phase-shifter 271 is a third waveguide formed in a window of the first cladding material 241 filled by a second cladding material 242 .
- the fourth phase-shifter 272 is a duplicate waveguide the same as the third phase-shifter 271 having substantially the same structure and optical-thermal properties and embedded in the same (second) cladding 242 .
- the second cladding 242 is the same as the first cladding 241 so that no window formation in the first cladding 241 is needed. The unit of the two duplicated waveguides ensures that it is automatically an athermal unit.
- the process of forming the first waveguide and the second waveguide includes forming at least a heating element thereof configured to tune phase delays of the first waveguide and the second waveguide independently.
- the method of forming the third waveguide further includes forming a combined phase-shifter including two waveguides coupled to each other in parallel.
- the two waveguides are respectively coupled with the first entry port of the first 2 ⁇ 2 splitter via a first 1 ⁇ 2 splitter and the first exit port of the second 2 ⁇ 2 splitter via a second 2 ⁇ 1 splitter to form an optical loop.
- the two waveguides are either two identical ones or constrained under an athermal condition that a temperature variation of a first effective index of refraction multiplied by a first length of a first one of the two waveguides therein cancels a temperature variation of a second effective index of refraction multiplied by a second length of a second one of the two waveguides therein.
- the method also includes cascading in series multiple units of the first waveguide and the second waveguide in the optical loop with the third waveguide for achieving different values of total phase delay.
- Each unit of the first waveguide and the second waveguide is coupled in parallel to each other and still satisfied the athermal condition.
- the method also includes cascading in parallel multiple units of the combined phase-shifter in the optical loop with the first waveguide and the second waveguide for achieving different values of total phase delay.
- Each unit of the combined phase-shifter is constrained under the athermal condition.
- the optical dispersion compensator in an athermal configuration described herein can be cascaded in whole or part, in one direction or both direction, in series or in parallel.
- FIG. 9 is a schematic diagram of an optical dispersion compensator in an athermal configuration cascaded in whole according to an alternative embodiment of the present invention. This diagram is merely an example, which should not unduly limit the scope of the claims. One of ordinary skill in the art would recognize many variations, alternatives, and modifications.
- the optical dispersion compensator 100 is substantially the same one described in FIG. 6 .
- the optical dispersion compensator 1000 is formed by cascading multiple optical dispersion compensator 100 one after another in series.
- optical dispersion compensator 100 ′ which does not have to exactly the same as the optical dispersion compensator 100 , is coupled to the optical dispersion compensator 100 .
- another optical dispersion compensator 100 ′′ can be coupled to the optical dispersion compensator 100 ′, and so on.
- each optical dispersion compensator 100 in the series is configured to be in an athermal condition defined by formula (1) and (2).
- the optical dispersion compensator 1000 can achieve different phase shift that is suitable for compensating different dispersion of optical fiber in different length or different working environment.
- FIG. 10 is a schematic diagram of an optical dispersion compensator in an athermal configuration cascaded in part according to an alternative embodiment of the present invention.
- This diagram is merely an example, which should not unduly limit the scope of the claims.
- the optical dispersion compensator 2000 includes a cascaded in part main branch and a feedback branch.
- a part 50 including a single 2 ⁇ 2 splitter and two phase shifters (phase shifter 1 and phase shifter 2 ) is a similar part of the optical dispersion compensator 100 of FIG. 6 .
- the part 50 each can be formed with an athermal condition restricted by the formula (1), is selected to a unit for cascading one after another in series only within the main branch.
- the feedback branch having one phase shifter 3 remains the same as that in FIG. 6 with an athermal condition restricted by the formula (2).
- a similar unit 50 ′ is coupled via a 2 ⁇ 2 splitter to the unit 50
- another similar unit 50 ′′ is coupled to the unit 50 ′ in a similar manner, and so on in the main branch, while the feedback branch keeps the same as that in FIG. 6 .
- FIG. 11 is a schematic diagram of an optical dispersion compensator in an athermal configuration cascaded in part according to another alternative embodiment of the present invention.
- This diagram is merely an example, which should not unduly limit the scope of the claims.
- the optical dispersion compensator 3000 is formed by cascading one or more feedback part 240 of the optical dispersion compensator 200 ( FIG. 7 ).
- each cascading unit 240 is an athermal MZ interferometer satisfying the formula (1) for its two sub-branches.
- a second feedback part 240 ′ is coupled to the first feedback part 240 via a couple of 2 ⁇ 2 couplers like those couplers 251 and 252 .
- a third feedback part 240 ′′ can be coupled to the second feedback part 240 ′, and so on. All the cascaded units can be kept in an athermal condition individually.
- each first cascading unit 240 , 240 ′, 240 ′′, . . . can be the same or different in phase shift but all are kept in athermal condition defined by formula (1).
- each first cascading unit 240 , 240 ′, 240 ′′, . . . is an athermal MZ interferometer.
- Each first cascaded compensator 400 overall is also configured to be an athermal one.
- each next first cascaded compensator 400 ′ can be the same or different in phase shift comparing to the first cascaded compensator 400 and the same in an athermal configuration.
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Abstract
Description
For the third phase-
Practically, the second cladding material used to surround the third waveguide core needs to be properly selected. Optionally, the core of the
Claims (20)
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US16/708,172 US10641965B2 (en) | 2017-08-03 | 2019-12-09 | Optical dispersion compensator on silicon |
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US10641965B2 (en) | 2020-05-05 |
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US20200110220A1 (en) | 2020-04-09 |
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